The National Computing Education Accreditation Council organised a capacity building workshop titled Physical Training on Implementation of Outcome Based Education in Its True Essence, aimed at strengthening the effective implementation of outcome based education across higher education institutions. The session brought together faculty members and academic leaders from universities across Karachi to work through the practical challenges of applying the framework in real classroom settings.
The workshop was attended by Professor Doctor Abdul Hameed Pitafi, Doctor Waleej Haider, Doctor M Nadeem, Doctor Anam Akbar, Engineer Tahmina Khan, and Saba Naeem from Sir Syed University of Engineering and Technology, along with faculty members from other participating institutions. National Computing Education Accreditation Council, the body responsible for accrediting bachelor level computing degree programmes across Pakistan, has increasingly focused its capacity building efforts on ensuring institutions move beyond documentation and formal compliance toward genuinely embedding outcome based principles in their teaching practices.
The training provided participants with an in depth understanding of the core philosophy behind outcome based education, with expert facilitators highlighting common shortcomings observed in current practices at many institutions. Discussions introduced practical, evidence based approaches for aligning curriculum design, teaching methodologies, assessment strategies, and continuous quality improvement processes with measurable learning outcomes, addressing a gap that accreditation bodies have often identified between the stated adoption of outcome based frameworks and their actual classroom implementation.
Through interactive discussions, case studies, and practical examples, participants worked through how to apply outcome based education in a way that genuinely improves student learning rather than functioning as a paperwork exercise for accreditation purposes. The workshop forms part of a broader pattern of academic capacity building activity around outcome based education in Pakistan, with similar sessions having been organised at other universities in recent months as institutions work to bring their computing and engineering programmes into closer alignment with international accreditation standards, including those associated with the Seoul Accord.
The session concluded with a shared commitment among participating institutions to adopt more authentic, outcome driven educational practices going forward. The initiative comes against a backdrop of ongoing concern within Pakistan’s technology sector about the employability of computing graduates, with a recent industry survey finding that only a small share of computing and information technology graduates secure roles within major technology companies each year, underscoring the importance efforts such as this workshop place on strengthening the practical relevance and quality of computing education across the country’s universities.
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